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Forsell PA  Boie Y  Montalibet J  Collins S  Kennedy BP 《Gene》2000,260(1-2):145-153
PTP-1B is a ubiquitously expressed intracellular protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) that has been implicated in the negative regulation of insulin signaling. Mice deficient in PTP-1B were found to have an enhanced insulin sensitivity and a resistance to diet-induced obesity. Interestingly, the human PTP-1B gene maps to chromosome 20 q13.1 in a region that has been associated with diabetes and obesity. Although there has been a partial characterization of the 3′ end of the human PTP-1B gene, the complete gene organization has not been described. In order to further characterize the PTP-1B gene, we have cloned and determined the genomic organization for both the human and mouse PTP-1B genes including the promoter. The human gene spans >74 kb and features a large first intron of >54 kb; the mouse gene likewise contains a large first intron, although the exact size has not been determined. The organization of the human and mouse PTP-1B genes is identical except for an additional exon at the 3′ end of the human that is absent in the mouse. The mouse PTP-1B gene maps to the distal arm of mouse chromosome 2 in the region H2-H3. This region is associated with a mouse obesity quantitiative trait locus (QTL) and is syntenic with human chromosome 20. The promoter region of both the human and mouse genes contain no TATA box but multiple GC-rich sequences that contain a number of consensus SP-1 binding sites. The basal activity of the human PTP-1B promoter was characterized in Hep G2 cells using up to 8 kb of 5′ flanking sequence. A 432 bp promoter construct immediately upstream of the ATG was able to confer maximal promoter activity. Within this sequence, there are at least three GC-rich sequences and one CCAAT box, and deletion of any of these elements results in decreased promoter activity. In addition, the promoter in a number of mouse strains contains, 3.5 kb upstream of the start codon, an insertion of an intracisternal a particle (IAP) element that possibly could alter the expression of PTP-1B mRNA in these strains.  相似文献   

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A putative proximal promoter was defined previously for the mouse glucagon receptor (GR) gene. In the present study, a distal promoter was characterized upstream from a novel non-coding exon revealed by the 5'-rapid amplification of cDNA ends from mouse liver tissue. The 5'-flanking region of the mouse GR gene was cloned up to 6 kb and the structural organization was compared to the 5' untranslated region of the rat gene cloned up to 7 kb. The novel exon, separated by an intron of 3.8 kb from the first coding exon, displayed a high homology (80%) with the most distal of the two untranslated exons found in the 5' region of the rat GR gene. The mouse distal promoter region, extending up to -1 kb from the novel exon, displayed 85% identity with the rat promoter. Both contain a highly GC-rich sequence with five putative binding sites for Sp1, but no consensus TATA or CAAT elements. To evaluate basal promoter activities, 5'-flanking sequences of mouse or rat GR genes were fused to a luciferase reporter gene and transiently expressed in a mouse and in a rat cell line, respectively or in rat hepatocytes. Both mouse and rat distal promoter regions directed a high level of reporter gene activity. Deletion of the Sp1 binding sites region or mutation of the second proximal Sp1 sequence markedly reduced the distal promoter activity of the reporter gene. The mouse proximal promoter activity was 2- to 3-fold less than the distal promoter, for which no functional counterpart was observed in the similar region of the rat gene.  相似文献   

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We investigated the genomic organization of pancreatic zymogen granule membrane-associated protein GP2, a GPI-anchored protein exhibiting self-aggregation at acidic pH, in order to construct a gene-knockout mouse. Cloning and analysis of lambda clones encoding GP2 from 129 Svj mouse genomic DNA libraries showed that the GP2 gene spans about 16.8 kb and includes 11 exons. Identifiable functional domains including a signal sequence, an EGF-like motif, a putative condensing ZP domain, a GPI-anchor attachment site, and a transmembrane sequence for GPI anchoring are encoded in separate exons. Using FISH, the GP2 gene was mapped to mouse chromosome 7F1 near the gene for THP, a GP2 homolog expressed in the cells of thick ascending loop of Henle (TALH) in the kidney. Further analysis of the mouse genome revealed that the THP and GP2 genes are adjacent to one another and are separated by only 3.5 kb in the 7F1 locus. Additionally, the overall structure of the THP gene, 16.2kb with 11 exons, was strikingly similar to that of GP2. This finding suggests that the GP2 and THP genes were generated by gene duplication and evolved separately to acquire regulatory elements leading to tissue-specific expression. Comparative analysis revealed that the 5' flanking region of the THP gene is similar to the first intron of NKCC2, a TALH cell-specific ion-transporter gene. The promoter region of the GP2 gene shares cis-elements found in other pancreas-specific genes. Using this genetic information, a GP2 null mutation was successfully introduced into an ES cell line, and an animal model was established without disruption of THP expression.  相似文献   

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We report here the molecular cloning of the mouse neutral ceramidase gene and its promoter analysis. The gene, composed of 27 exons ranging in size from 40 to 292 bp, spans more than 70 kb. Analysis of the 5(')-flanking region of the ceramidase genes revealed that the first exon of the gene of mouse liver was exactly the same as that of mouse kidney and Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts but completely different from that of mouse brain. The putative promoter regions of liver and brain ceramidase genes contained several well-characterized promoter elements such as GATA-2, C/EBP, and HNF3beta but lacked TATA and CAAT boxes, a typical feature of a housekeeping gene, although the expression is regulated in a tissue-specific manner. Interestingly, a GC box was exclusively found in the putative promoter of mouse liver whereas potential AP1 and AP4 binding sites were present in that of mouse brain. By a luciferase reporter gene assay, it was shown that the GC-rich region, which exists just upstream of the first exon, conferred the promoter activity in Swiss 3T3 cells.  相似文献   

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